On Thu, Jul 19, 2018 at 03:04:33PM +0200, Andrew Jones wrote:
> On Thu, Jun 21, 2018 at 03:57:38PM +0100, Dave Martin wrote:
> > This patch adds the following registers for access via the
> > KVM_{GET,SET}_ONE_REG interface:
> > 
> >  * KVM_REG_ARM64_SVE_ZREG(n, i) (n = 0..31) (in 2048-bit slices)
> >  * KVM_REG_ARM64_SVE_PREG(n, i) (n = 0..15) (in 256-bit slices)
> >  * KVM_REG_ARM64_SVE_FFR(i) (in 256-bit slices)
> > 
> > In order to adapt gracefully to future architectural extensions,
> > the registers are divided up into slices as noted above:  the i
> > parameter denotes the slice index.
> > 
> > For simplicity, bits or slices that exceed the maximum vector
> > length supported for the vcpu are ignored for KVM_SET_ONE_REG, and
> > read as zero for KVM_GET_ONE_REG.
> > 
> > For the current architecture, only slice i = 0 is significant.  The
> > interface design allows i to increase to up to 31 in the future if
> > required by future architectural amendments.
> > 
> > The registers are only visible for vcpus that have SVE enabled.
> > They are not enumerated by KVM_GET_REG_LIST on vcpus that do not
> > have SVE.  In all cases, surplus slices are not enumerated by
> > KVM_GET_REG_LIST.
> > 
> > Accesses to the FPSIMD registers via KVM_REG_ARM_CORE are
> > redirected to access the underlying vcpu SVE register storage as
> > appropriate.  In order to make this more straightforward, register
> > accesses that straddle register boundaries are no longer guaranteed
> > to succeed.  (Support for such use was never deliberate, and
> > userspace does not currently seem to be relying on it.)
> > 
> > Signed-off-by: Dave Martin <dave.mar...@arm.com>

[...]

> > diff --git a/arch/arm64/kvm/guest.c b/arch/arm64/kvm/guest.c

[...]

> > +static int sve_reg_bounds(struct reg_bounds_struct *b,
> > +                     const struct kvm_vcpu *vcpu,
> > +                     const struct kvm_one_reg *reg)
> > +{

[...]

> > +   b->kptr += start;
> > +
> > +   if (copy_limit < start)
> > +           copy_limit = start;
> > +   else if (copy_limit > limit)
> > +           copy_limit = limit;
> 
>  copy_limit = clamp(copy_limit, start, limit)

Hmmm, having looked in detail in the definition of clamp(), I'm not sure
I like it that much -- it can introduce type issues that are not readily
apparent to the reader.

gcc can warn about signed/unsigned comparisons, which is the only issue
where clamp() genuinely helps AFAICT, but this requires -Wsign-compare
(which is not enabled by default, nor with -Wall).  Great.

I can use clamp() if you feel strongly about it, but otherwise I tend
prefer my subtleties to be in plain sight rather than buried inside a
macro, unless there is a serious verbosity impact from not using the
macro (here, I would say there isn't, since it's just a single
instance).

[...]

Cheers
---Dave
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